The Critical Assessment of Techniques for Protein Structure Prediction (CASP) experiment has been conducted for the third time. An obvious question is whether there has been progress from CASP1 to CASP3. An analysis depends on many variables, including prediction category, number and difficulty of t
A measure of progress in fold recognition?
β Scribed by Aron Marchler-Bauer; Stephen H. Bryant
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 117 KB
- Volume
- 37
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0887-3585
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
We present a retrospective analysis of CASP3 threading predictions, applying evaluation and assessment criteria used at CASP2. Our purpose is twofold. First, we wish to ask whether measures of model accuracy are comparable between CASP3 and CASP2, even though they have been calculated differently. We find that these quantities are effectively the same, and that either may be used to compare model accuracy. Secondly, we wish to assess progress in fold recognition by comparing the numbers of CASP2 and CASP3 models that cross specific accuracy thresholds. We find that the number of accurate models at CASP3 drops sharply as the targets become more difficult, with less extensive similarity to known structures, exactly the pattern seen at CASP2. CASP3 teams do not seem to have predicted accurate models for targets of greater difficulty, and for a given difficulty range the best CASP3 models seem no more accurate than the best models at CASP2. At CASP3, however, we find greater numbers of accurate models for medium-difficulty targets, with extensive similarity to a known structure but no shared sequence motifs. Threading methods would appear to have become more reliable for modeling based on remote evolutionary relationships.
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We submitted nine predictions to CASP2 using our fold recognition program ProFIT. Two of these structures were still unsolved by the end of the experiment, six had a recognizable fold, and one fold was new. Four predictions of the six recognizable folds were correct. Two models were excellent in ter
We describe the results obtained using fold recognition techniques in our third participation in the CASP experiment. The approach relies on knowledge-based potentials for alignment production and fold identification. As indicated by the increase in alignment quality and fold identification reliabil
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